I first saw this game on naruto and then I looked online some and omg I want to play this game so bad. I can't find much online. I'm willing to buy a book telling me how to play but where the heck to a buy a shogi game? I want either Dai shogi-( )preferably or chu-shogi. For some reason plain old regular shougi bores me I like the complexity and largeness of games. Thats why I'm interested in go. If anyone can tell me where the heck I can get a dai-shogi set I'd so much appreciate it!! We may also discuss the ridiculous and (for some reason awesome) taikyoku shogi. Which has 74 different tiles!! and the board is enourmous look it up on wiki.

kentaku_sama wrote:If anyone can tell me where the heck I can get a dai-shogi set I'd so much appreciate it!!

Good luck finding anybody to play with you. You're probably not going to find many people too interested in anything but plain ol' shogi, and if you're not in Japan, even that might be difficult if there's not a Japantown nearby.

I'd suggest sticking with Go if you're interested in epic large-scale games; it's surely a much more interesting game from a stategic standpoint than large-scale shogi variants. Sometimes less is more.

kentaku_sama wrote:I first saw this game on naruto and then I looked online some and omg I want to play this game so bad. I can't find much online. I'm willing to buy a book telling me how to play but where the heck to a buy a shogi game? I want either Dai shogi-( )preferably or chu-shogi. For some reason plain old regular shougi bores me I like the complexity and largeness of games. Thats why I'm interested in go. If anyone can tell me where the heck I can get a dai-shogi set I'd so much appreciate it!! We may also discuss the ridiculous and (for some reason awesome) taikyoku shogi. Which has 74 different tiles!! and the board is enourmous look it up on wiki.

Could you please write a little more clearly? It sounds like you have never played shogi at all.....and like you have been playing shogi so long you're bored of it.

This ought to cover you for chu-shogi. Read far enough down and you'll discover that the game is all but dead, with a tiny handful of folks attempting to keep it on life support.

This page addresses the ludicrous taikyoku-shogi in which each player has 402 pieces of 209 types, each with their own rules of movement. Yes, we are all properly impressed with the vastness of a brain which requires something like that to entertain itself, lesser games giving rise to naught but yawns.

Was this meant as a throwaway thread or did you actually want some information and interaction out of it?

If the former, blog it.

If the latter, participate in it. When you don't it makes those who took the time and effort to attempt to be helpful become less likely to do so in the future. At a minimum, give some indication you came back and took note of replies.

Or you could just google the rules and make paper tiles, drawing some directional arrows onto the tiles that show the movement of each tile.

Also, try sending e-mail to the author of Hikaru no Go, pestering him to write a Shogi manga. That might cause the popularity of Shogi to rise enough so that you can actually find a friend to play with in real life.

I play Chu Shogi all the time It's available for play on Richard's Play-By-eMail Server (http://www.gamerz.net/pbmserv), so is Dai Shogi, and Tenjiku Shogi.

I've played Dai Dai Shogi via email several times, but it usually takes a couple years to get through one game. I've also played Ko Shogi via email once. Surprisingly, even though it's on a larger board than Dai Dai it only took a few months to finish a game. Ko is a pretty interesting variant with it's shooting pieces and strange promotion rules. I'd like to give it another try sometime.